On Feb 15, 2010, at 2:51 AM, Tim Bunce wrote:
> The signature doesn't just qualify the selection of the function,
> it also ensures appropriate interpretation of the arguments.
>
> I could allow call('foo', @args), which could be written call(foo => @args),
> but what should that mean in terms of the underlying behaviour?
>
> I think there are three practical options:
> a) treat it the same as call('foo(unknown...)', @args)
I believe that's basically what psql does. It's certainly what DBD::Pg does.
> b) treat it the same as call('foo(text...)', @args)
Probably not a great idea.
> c) instead of using a cached prepared query, build an SQL statement
> for every execution, which would naturally have to quote all values:
> my $args = join ",", map { ::quote_nullable($_) } @_;
> return ::spi_exec_query("select * from $spname($args)");
>
> I suspect there are subtle issues (that I'm unfamilar with) lurking here.
> I'd appreciate someone with greater understanding spelling out the issues
> and trade-offs in those options.
I'm pretty sure the implementation doesn't have to declare the types of anything:
sub AUTOLOAD { my $self = shift; our $AUTOLOAD; (my $fn = $AUTOLOAD) =~ s/.*://; my
$prepared= spi_prepare( 'EXECUTE ' . quote_ident($fn) . '(' . join(', ', ('?') x @_) .
')'; # Cache it and call it. }
> Umm,
> tl_activity_stats_sql => [qw(text[] int)]
>
> seems to me longer and rather less visually appealing than
>
> 'tl_activity_stats_sql(text[], int)'
That would work, too. But either way, having to specify the signature would be the exception rather than the rule.
You'donly need to do it when calling a polymorphic function with the same number of arguments as another polymorphic
function.
>> and only provide the signature when I need to disambiguate between
>> polymorphic variants.
>
> Or need to qualify the type of the argument for some other reason, like
> passing an array reference.
I don't think it's necessary. I mean, if you're passed an array, you should of course pass it to PostgreSQL, but it can
beanyarray.
> But perhaps we can agree on one of the options a/b/c above and then
> this issue will be less relevant. It's not like you'd be saving much
> typing:
>
> call('tl_activity_stats_sql', @args)
> call(tl_activity_stats_sql => @args)
> SP->tl_activity_stats_sql(@args)
No, but the latter is more Perlish.
> You could always add a trivial SP::AUTOLOAD wrapper function to your
> plperl.on_init code :)
Yeah yeah. I could even put one on CPAN. ;-P But where are you caching planned functions?
Best,
David